The man charged with planting pipe bombs outside Republican and Democratic national party headquarters before the Jan. 6 Capitol riots told the FBI he supported Donald Trump and believed Trump won the 2020 election, according to two people familiar with his interview.
Brian Cole Jr., 30, who was arrested Thursday at his family home in a Northern Virginia exurb of Washington and criminally charged, confessed to the FBI that he planted the bombs near the Capitol on Jan. 5, 2021, according to two sources familiar with Cole’s interview who requested anonymity to speak about a sensitive ongoing investigation.
Investigators also found social media posts in which the suspect appeared to express anarchist leanings, complicating their efforts to determine a clear motive, the sources said. But they found no evidence that he colluded with militant organizations or with any Trump supporters who organized the breach of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, the sources said.
The FBI has not publicly revealed a motive Cole might have had for placing the bombs outside the Republican National Committee and Democratic National Committee headquarters in the hours before the attack. “It’s not yet clear what the drivers were,” said a law enforcement official, who requested anonymity to speak about the case.
During the suspect’s first federal court appearance in Washington Friday afternoon, which lasted about 10 minutes, it was revealed that FBI agents spoke to Cole for four hours following his arrest.
The government is seeking to keep Cole, who did not make a plea upon the initial court appearance, detained. He wore a prison jumpsuit and was joined in the courtroom inside the U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia by several family members.
The suspect has retained attorney John Shoreman to represent him, according to the court docket. A bio of Shoreman on his law firm’s website quotes him as saying, “I will always fight a case to its legal death; I am prepared to take my client’s case through the entire appeals process.”
A Justice Department spokesperson declined to comment, stressing that the investigation remains ongoing and many questions about Cole have not yet been answered.
Attorney General Pam Bondi said Friday morning that she expected further charges in the case. “They are poring through evidence. You saw hundreds of agents are on this case, because this is a very dangerous person,” Bondi said on Fox News, adding, “I believe there are more charges to come.”
Cole’s arrest on Thursday ended a long search in a case that bred a plethora of conspiracy theories about who planted the pipe bombs before a mob of pro-Trump supporters stormed the Capitol, aiming to stop Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s election victory. The case went unsolved for almost five years, prompting pushback over the FBI’s inability to resolve one of the last major questions that loomed over Jan. 6. The FBI offered a sizable cash reward at the beginning of the year for information that led to an arrest.
Prior to his appointment by Trump to be deputy director of the FBI, Dan Bongino, a former U.S. Secret Service agent turned right-wing podcaster, was a leading voice on those conspiracy theories. Bongino alleged earlier this year in an episode of his podcast, ‘The Dan Bongino Show,” that the FBI was engaging in a massive cover-up because the incident was an inside job orchestrated by an anti-Trump actor.









